<p>Iraq's Karbala is known as a religious pilgrimage site, visited by millions of worshippers, but shisha-smokers revere it for a different reason: its signature wooden waterpipes.</p>.<p>About 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of Iraq's capital, within walking distance of Karbala's two Shiite shrines, avid smokers drag puffs of fruit-flavoured tobacco from their tall pipes.</p>.<p>The business of strictly gender-separated cafes has carried on, despite the heavy health risks associated with smoking and a full-blown pandemic that has brought an average of 4,000 new coronavirus cases a day to Iraq.</p>.<p>Cafe owner Hassan Ali is serving endless streams of sweet tea -- a must in any Iraqi establishment -- to customers sipping on locally-made waterpipes.</p>.<p>When they drag on the hand-held hose, the glass base full of water begins to bubble, cooling the smoke that passes through a half-metre pipe from a clay head, where sticky flavoured tobacco is laid out.</p>.<p>Normally made of iron or copper and imported, the pipes at Ali's cafe are carved from local white willow wood.</p>.<p>The hollow upper stems of these waterpipes or nargilehs are called bakkar -- and Ali maintains the wood enhances the flavour of the tobacco by keeping the smoke cool, unlike their metal rivals.</p>.<p>"If your tobacco tastes like apple or mint, you can smell it," he told AFP. "With the others, you only have smoke."</p>.<p>One of the last woodworkers keeping the craft alive in Karbala is Mohamed Baqer, a moustached, 56-year-old who has spent 30 years of his life as a carpenter.</p>.<p>"The designs that come out while I'm carving are all from my head," Baqer told AFP with a beaming smile, surrounded by mounds of sawdust in his sweltering workshop. "I carve what I feel like really."</p>.<p>He puffs away on a cigarette as he whittles down the light wood, which comes from forests by the Euphrates River.</p>.<p>"Before I put the wood in the turning machine, I'm a blank slate," said Baqer. "As soon as it starts turning, it comes to me. It turns out beautiful or how the customer wants it."</p>.<p>The manual labour involved in shaping the thick wood into a polished product is intensive, but makes for a unique product.</p>.<p>He averages about 20 bakkars a day.</p>.<p>A few streets away is Mohamed Jassim, whose father and grandfather practised the same trade, and who is already training his teenage son how to carve.</p>.<p>Smokers gravitate towards his craftsmanship because of a sense of history and hard work, but also because the wood makes smoking more refreshing for people living in Iraq's scorchingly hot south.</p>.<p>"In Baghdad and further north, it's a bit cooler, so they can use metal," he explained to AFP.</p>.<p>In his workshop, Jassim keeps an old bakkar that his grandfather carved in the 1950s -- and he still uses the same family signature in his modern works.</p>.<p>One of his designs is nicknamed "Islamic," because he digs small domes resembling mosques into the wood.</p>.<p>"If you love your job, you become creative at it," he said.</p>.<p>Woodworkers are glad to have survived the three-month closure of shisha cafes across Iraq earlier this year, part of efforts to stem the spread of Covid-19.</p>.<p>Orders come from both locally and beyond.</p>.<p>All of the bakkars at Ali's cafe are from Jassim, who has also shipped his work to various local provinces, and even to Lebanon and as far away as Germany.</p>.<p>Jassim does not fear his craft withering away anytime soon.</p>.<p>"As long as there's tobacco, we're always going to be just fine," he said.</p>
<p>Iraq's Karbala is known as a religious pilgrimage site, visited by millions of worshippers, but shisha-smokers revere it for a different reason: its signature wooden waterpipes.</p>.<p>About 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of Iraq's capital, within walking distance of Karbala's two Shiite shrines, avid smokers drag puffs of fruit-flavoured tobacco from their tall pipes.</p>.<p>The business of strictly gender-separated cafes has carried on, despite the heavy health risks associated with smoking and a full-blown pandemic that has brought an average of 4,000 new coronavirus cases a day to Iraq.</p>.<p>Cafe owner Hassan Ali is serving endless streams of sweet tea -- a must in any Iraqi establishment -- to customers sipping on locally-made waterpipes.</p>.<p>When they drag on the hand-held hose, the glass base full of water begins to bubble, cooling the smoke that passes through a half-metre pipe from a clay head, where sticky flavoured tobacco is laid out.</p>.<p>Normally made of iron or copper and imported, the pipes at Ali's cafe are carved from local white willow wood.</p>.<p>The hollow upper stems of these waterpipes or nargilehs are called bakkar -- and Ali maintains the wood enhances the flavour of the tobacco by keeping the smoke cool, unlike their metal rivals.</p>.<p>"If your tobacco tastes like apple or mint, you can smell it," he told AFP. "With the others, you only have smoke."</p>.<p>One of the last woodworkers keeping the craft alive in Karbala is Mohamed Baqer, a moustached, 56-year-old who has spent 30 years of his life as a carpenter.</p>.<p>"The designs that come out while I'm carving are all from my head," Baqer told AFP with a beaming smile, surrounded by mounds of sawdust in his sweltering workshop. "I carve what I feel like really."</p>.<p>He puffs away on a cigarette as he whittles down the light wood, which comes from forests by the Euphrates River.</p>.<p>"Before I put the wood in the turning machine, I'm a blank slate," said Baqer. "As soon as it starts turning, it comes to me. It turns out beautiful or how the customer wants it."</p>.<p>The manual labour involved in shaping the thick wood into a polished product is intensive, but makes for a unique product.</p>.<p>He averages about 20 bakkars a day.</p>.<p>A few streets away is Mohamed Jassim, whose father and grandfather practised the same trade, and who is already training his teenage son how to carve.</p>.<p>Smokers gravitate towards his craftsmanship because of a sense of history and hard work, but also because the wood makes smoking more refreshing for people living in Iraq's scorchingly hot south.</p>.<p>"In Baghdad and further north, it's a bit cooler, so they can use metal," he explained to AFP.</p>.<p>In his workshop, Jassim keeps an old bakkar that his grandfather carved in the 1950s -- and he still uses the same family signature in his modern works.</p>.<p>One of his designs is nicknamed "Islamic," because he digs small domes resembling mosques into the wood.</p>.<p>"If you love your job, you become creative at it," he said.</p>.<p>Woodworkers are glad to have survived the three-month closure of shisha cafes across Iraq earlier this year, part of efforts to stem the spread of Covid-19.</p>.<p>Orders come from both locally and beyond.</p>.<p>All of the bakkars at Ali's cafe are from Jassim, who has also shipped his work to various local provinces, and even to Lebanon and as far away as Germany.</p>.<p>Jassim does not fear his craft withering away anytime soon.</p>.<p>"As long as there's tobacco, we're always going to be just fine," he said.</p>